... kiss and deem it Spring, Under the harvest moon. Had I a garden, claustral yews Should shut out railing wind, That Poets might on sadness muse With a majestic mind ; With ear attuned and godlike gaze Scan Heaven and fathom Hell, Then through life's... The Garden that I Love - Página 130de Alfred Austin - 1896 - 168 páginasVisualização completa - Sobre este livro
| 1894 - 854 páginas
...IV. Had I a garden, it should grow Shelter where feeble feet Might loiter long, or wander slow, Ami deem decadence sweet ; Pausing, might ponder on the past. Vague twilight in their eyes, Wane calmer, cornel 1er, to the last, Then die, as Autumn dies. " How came you in possession of those lines ? "... | |
| Alfred Austin - 1895 - 192 páginas
...gaze Scan Heaven and fathom Hell, Then through life's labyrinthine maze Chant to us, 'All is well ! ' Had I a garden, it should grow Shelter where feeble...the past, Vague twilight in their eyes, Wane calmer, comclier, to the last, Then die, as Autumn dies. 1 How came you in possession of those lines ? ' asked... | |
| Alfred Simson - 1903 - 256 páginas
...Scan Heaven, and fathom Hell, Then through life's labyrinthine maze Chant to us, " All is well ! " Had I a garden, it should grow Shelter where feeble...loiter long, or wander slow, And deem decadence sweet ; Her Beloved White Pigeons Settled About Her. C^ild and t^e dffatfien Pausing, might ponder on the... | |
| Alfred Simson - 1903 - 254 páginas
...gaze Scan Heaven, and fathom Hell, Then through life's labyrinthine maze Chant to us, "All is well! " Had I a garden, it should grow Shelter where feeble feet Might loiter long, or wander slow, Cpd and t^e Pausing, might ponder on the past, Vague twilight in their eyes, Wane calmer, comelier,... | |
| Alfred Austin - 1906 - 236 páginas
...gaze Scan Heaven and fathom Hell, Then through life's labyrinthine maze Chant to us,' All is well!' IT Had I a garden, it should grow Shelter where feeble...calmer, comelier, to the last, Then die, as Autumn dies. 16 ' How came you in possession of those lines ?' asked the Poet, in a tone of manifest reproach. '"... | |
| 1908 - 412 páginas
...claust1al yews Should shut out railing wind, That poets might on sadness muse With a majestic mind. "Had I a garden, it should grow Shelter where feeble...loiter long or wander slow And deem decadence sweet." To make a garden that shall closely approach one's ideal it is best to let the flowers grow much as... | |
| Abram Linwood Urban - 1913 - 160 páginas
..."The Nightingale" that "In nature there is nothing melancholy." I like these lines of Mr. Austin — "Had I a garden, it should grow Shelter where feeble...the past, Vague twilight in their eyes, Wane calmer, comeher, to the last, Then die, as Autumn dies." There is a growing restfulness as if the zest of making... | |
| |